The Sault Star published an article about the Deferral Account decision
The item is entitled “ CRTC rulings impact North” By Marc Capancioni , Special to the Star
This blog was created to keep stakeholders aware of ICT activities in the Algoma District. Disclaimer: This information is for information purposes only. It is not a recommendation or endorsement of any company or organization. THe Author does not receive compensation from the vendors or manufacturers mentioned in the articles. Financial and technical references are considered accurate at the time of publication and are subject to change.
The Sault Star published an article about the Deferral Account decision
The item is entitled “ CRTC rulings impact North” By Marc Capancioni , Special to the Star
In Telecom Decision CRTC 2010-637 released on Tuesday, 31 Aug 10, the Commission approved the use of $306.3M of Bell Deferral Account money to provide DSL based broadband (high speed) Internet service in the selected service areas. This would appear to nullify the Bell Canada submission to provide the coverage using 3G HSPA technology.
Particulars concerning the implementation schedule and other details are not available to me at this time.
I consider today’s decision a significant move forward and a better technical solution for broadband (high speed) Internet delivery to the users in the selected Deferral Account areas.
While I welcome this decision, it is not unknown for affected parties to initiate appeals that could slow down the implementation process.
I will post additional information as it becomes available on the ADnet web site and the ADnet blog over the next few days.
The Deferral Account areas in the Algoma District are SSM-Airport (Pointes areas), Wawa, Goulais, Echo Bay and St. Joseph Island.
Wireless Type | Advantage | Disadvantage | Cost * |
Satellite | 1. Universal coverage of Canada | 1. Latency/delay | MRC: $59.99 |
Fixed Wireless | 1. Relatively inexpensive to install | 1. Limited data speed | MRC: $47.95 |
HSPA | 1. Greatest data speed | 1. Line-of-sight and 5 km to cell tower | MRC: $35.00 – 1 GB |
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On 27 Aug 10 the CRTC issued a Media Advisory to advise “On August 31, 2010 a media lock-up will be held from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for the decisions related to the disposal of the funds remaining in Bell Canada, Bell Aliant, Telus and MTS Allstream's deferral accounts. “
I expect the decision will become made public shortly after 4:00 PM on Tuesday, 31 Aug 10.
I have not any seen leaks at the time of writing on what the decision will be.
As you recall, in January 2010 the Bell Companies proposed that Deferral Account funds be used to provide broadband connectivity in the designated Deferral Account areas by means of 3G HSPA wireless technology. Extensive discussions and consultations took place over the past several months leading up to Tuesday's anticipated announcement.
The Deferral Account areas in the Algoma District are SSM-Airport (Pointes areas), Wawa, Goulais, Echo Bay and St. Joseph Island.
The CRTC has released their annual Communications Monitoring Report 2009. The full 213 page (7.10 MB) report covers all aspects of the broadcast and telecommunications industry in Canada and may be downloaded from the CRTC site. Since most reader will be interested in the part pertaining to the Internet and broadband, I have posted a 10 page PDF extract at the ADnet website under the What’s New column.
The table below from the report is the high level summary. The statistic on average downloads and uploads near the bottom of the table are noteworthy and is far out of line with the total being touted by Bell in their Deferral Account proposal where they cite less than 2 GB per month. It also belies the argument of the proponents of 3G HSPA as the solution to broadband in rural areas as it is greater than the cap provided in the flat rate service shown before. Overage charges will run up the total bill quickly.
It also has a rate of growth in the 30% range for 2008 to 2009 which is only likely to increase at a greater rate with the introduction of new services such as Netflix. Rogers appears to have admitted as much with their recent cap adjustment although they state there is no direct relationship.
Internet and broadband availability at a glance | |||
2008 | 2009 | Growth | |
Revenues ($ billions) | 6.2 | 6.6 | 6.3% |
Internet access and transport | |||
Residential | 3.9 | 4.3 | 9.9% |
Business | 1.1 | 1.1 | 1.2% |
Wholesale | 0.2 | 0.3 | 21.5% |
Other | 1.0 | 1.0 | -5.5% |
Residential subscribers (millions) | 9.8 | 10.1 | 2.6% |
Residential high-speed access revenues per subscriber per month | $34.06 | $36.06 | 5.9% |
Internet access market share (revenue) | |||
Top 5 major ISPs (including affiliates) | 76% | 76% | |
Cable operators | 48% | 50% | |
ILECs (excluding out-of-territory) | 40% | 38% | |
Broadband availability (excluding satellite) | |||
National | 95% | 95% | |
Urban | 100% | 100% | |
Rural | 82% | 84% | |
Penetration: | |||
All speeds | 74% | 75% | |
High-speed | 69% | 72% | |
Broadband (1.5 Mbps and higher) | 52% | 62% | |
Broadband (5 Mbps and higher) | 41% | 44% | |
Average Gigabytes downloaded per month per user | 9.1 | 12.0 | |
Average Gigabytes uploaded per month per user | 3.2 | 3.4 | |
Source: CRTC data collection |
TBayTel confirmed they had a short term system outage and while the cellular network came back automatically, the Internet hardware needed a hard reset that required the dispatch of a service technician from the Wawa work centre.
They had no comment on the remote reset action that users reported.
TBayTel is investigating further as why this happened at all and how to detect/respond to these types of troubles better in the future.
Listed below are the speed categories used by the CRTC and Industry Canada. ADnet will comply with this convention in all documents from this point forward.
Low-speed Internet service includes speeds that are below 128 kilobits per second (128 Kbps).
High-speed Internet service includes speeds at or above 128 kilobits per second (128 Kbps).
Broadband Internet access service includes speeds that are above 1.5 megabits per second (Mbps).